Johnson v. Deep East Texas Regional Narcotics Trafficking Task Force

                                                            United States Court of Appeals
                                                                     Fifth Circuit
                                                                  F I L E D
               IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                    July 27, 2004
                          FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
                                                              Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                                                      Clerk

                              No. 03-40394




     NADINE JOHNSON,

                                             Plaintiff-Appellant,

           versus

     DEEP EAST TEXAS REGIONAL NARCOTICS
     TRAFFICKING TASK FORCE; ET AL,

                                             Defendants,

     NACOGDOCHES COUNTY; KIM COURTNEY,
     Task Force Member; RAMIRO MENDIOLA,
     Nacogdoches County Sheriff Deputy,

                                             Defendants-Appellees.



           Appeal from the United States District Court
                 for the Eastern District of Texas



Before GARWOOD, JOLLY, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

     In this damage suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 arising out of the

March 9, 2001 search of her home, plaintiff-appellant Nadine

Johnson   appeals   the   grant   of   summary   judgment   in   favor     of

defendants-appellees Nacogdoches County and its deputy sheriffs Kim

Courtney and Ramiro Mendiola.      We affirm.
                              Facts and Proceedings Below

        On March 9, 2001, the Houston Field Division of the Drug

Enforcement Agency (DEA) coordinated a “round up” of drug-related,

outstanding         state      and    federal       arrest       warrants       in    Nacogdoches

County,       Texas      (and     possibly        other      counties).            The     agencies

participating in this round up included the DEA, the ATF, the

United States Marshal’s Service, the Texas Department of Public

Safety, the City of Nacogdoches Police Department, the Nacogdoches

County Sheriff’s Department, the Sabine County Sheriff’s Office,

and the Deep East Texas Narcotics Trafficking Task Force (the Task

Force).1

        In preparation for the round up, defendant-appellee Ramiro

Mendiola (Mendiola), a deputy sheriff with the Nacogdoches County

Sheriff’s Office on assignment to the Task Force, put together

“bust out” packages for the persons to be arrested.                                  Each package

contained the warrant(or warrants) for that person, a blank consent

to search form, the address of the person to be arrested which was

taken from the offense report, and a photograph of that person, if



        1
         The exact nature of the Task Force is not entirely clear from the record. It apparently
arises from an interlocal cooperation contract or contracts, under Chapter 791 of the Texas
Government Code, between various cities and counties in East Texas, including, among others,
Nacogdoches County and the City of Nacogdoches, and various state agencies. Personnel were
assigned to it from participating local governments and agencies, it received funding from
participating local governments and from the state, and it had some sort of board of directors
which included representatives from participating local governments. At an early stage in the
litigation, the district court dismissed the Task Force, ruling that it was not a legal entity subject
to suit. Neither that ruling nor the basis for it has been addressed by any party to this appeal.

                                                   2
available.   After having prepared the packages, Mendiola turned

them over to the DEA to be distributed at the round up meeting on

the morning of March 9th.

     The approximately eighty-seven officers and agents that were

to participate in the round up met at 6:30 a.m. on the morning of

March 9th, at a DEA command center site, and were then separated

into eight teams and given assignments. Together, these teams were

to execute a total of eighty-six state and federal warrants.   Each

team leader was given a bust out package on each suspect assigned

to that team, and the leaders were told to refer to these packages

for the information to conduct their assignments. The team leaders

waited for instructions from the DEA command center to commence

execution of the warrants.   While defendant-appellee Kim Courtney

(Courtney), a Nacogdoches County deputy sheriff on assignment to

the Task Force, was assigned to one of these teams, Mendiola played

no role in the execution of the warrants, nor was he a part of any

team.

     Team three, led by DEA Agent Fred Marshall (Marshall), was

originally comprised of eight members, including Courtney.     This

team was assigned to execute twelve arrest warrants on a total of

ten people, one of whom was Davin Wayne Howard (Howard).     Howard

had two outstanding state felony arrest warrants for the delivery

of crack cocaine, each warrant being dated December 11, 2000.

These two warrants were apparently based on grand jury felony



                                 3
indictments for crack cocaine sales on September 19, 2000 and

October 26, 2000.   The bust out package on Howard indicated that

his address was 419 Otis Street, Nacogdoches.    In preparing this

and all other bust out packages, Mendiola referred to the suspect’s

offense report in the Nacogdoches County jail records. The offense

reports on the October 26 and September 19, 2000 sales by Howard

each showed his address as 419 Otis Street (the reports described

the offenses as street buys on other streets).     Howard had been

booked in the County jail on July 10, 2000, and then listed his

address as 419 Otis Street.   This was apparently the source of the

information concerning his address on the October 26 and September

19, 2000 offense reports.     419 Otis Street was the address that

Mendiola included in preparing Howard’s package.2 However, unknown


     2
      The arrest warrants did not themselves state Howard’s
address. The underlying offenses were sales of crack cocaine by
Howard to undercover officers, one on September 19, 2000 and the
other on October 26, 2000, each in the City of Nacogdoches. The
offense reports on those two sales each reflect Howard’s address
as 419 Otis Street. No arrest was made at the time of either
sale. The report on the September 19 sale reflects that it took
place “on the roadway on Orton street”; the report on the October
26 sale reflects that it took place on the corner of Orton and
Brown streets. The report on the October 26 sale indicates that
Howard’s address was obtained from the book-in photograph
obtained from the jail records, presumably that from the July 10,
2000 arrest. Courtney and another undercover agent, Vanya, made
the October 26 “buy”; Vanya prepared the report, including its
reference to Howard’s address. The September 19 “buy” was made
by undercover agents Shaver and Shugart, with the latter
preparing the report. When asked at her deposition where the
information as to Howard’s address in the report of the September
19 “buy” came from, Courtney said “I would imagine it’s from the
book-in photograph” – presumably referring to that from the July
10, 2000 arrest – but that it was “possible” that Shugart or

                                  4
to Mendiola, or any other of the individual defendants or any law

enforcement officers, Howard had in fact not been living at the

Otis Street address since August of 2000.3    Howard’s mother, Mrs.

Wade, had been leasing the house for some time until her eviction

in August 2000.   One of the Team three members, City of Nacogdoches

Police Officer Cain, had seen Howard at the 419 Otis Street

residence in March 2000.   However, completely unknown to the Team

three members, on March 9, 2001, plaintiff, sixty-seven year old

Nadine Johnson was living there alone, as she had been since August

2000.

     The team members themselves played no role in acquiring the

information in the packages and had no information suggesting that

it was not, or was unlikely to be, correct.        At the briefing

earlier that morning, there was no discussion of Howard’s address.

The packages were given to the team leader, Marshall, and he told

the team members the addresses they were going to.     Courtney had


Shaver “had other independent information.” Neither Vanya,
Shugart nor Shaver was a member of Team three, and there is no
evidence any of them played any part in any of the events of
March 9, 2001.   Apart from understanding that Team three had
proceeded to the address listed for Howard on the bust out
package for him furnished to Marshall, there is no evidence that
Courtney had any knowledge or information as to Howard’s address
or that she purported to impart any such information to others.
     3
      However, Howard continued to list this as his current
address. When he was arrested on March 14, 2001, and booked into
jail, he listed 419 Otis Street as his address. There is no
evidence that on March 9, 2001, the records of the jail or of the
Sheriff’s department showed any other address (at any time) for
Howard or contained any suggestion that 419 Otis Street was not
then his address.

                                  5
nothing to do with confirming whether Howard was then, or ever had

been, at the Otis Street address, and as to decisions related to

that she was simply following the instructions of Marshall.                      The

team members were under the direction of DEA agent Marshall as the

team leader and they were to follow his commands and the DEA

procedures for executing the warrants. Marshall, based on the bust

out package,    believed     that      419     Otis   Street    was   where   Howard

resided, and so did the other team members.

     Team three arrived at the Otis Street location about 9 a.m. in

two separate cars.          Upon arrival, five of the team members,

including Courtney and team leader Marshall, went to the front

door, while others went around the back and side of the house.4

Marshall    knocked    on   the    door       and   announced    “police,     arrest

warrant,”   “police,    come      to   the     door,”   and    “police,   open   up”

repeatedly.     Upon hearing some movement in the house but not

receiving a response after approximately thirty seconds, Marshall

ordered team member Cain, a City of Nacogdoches police officer, to

breach the door.      Cain did so.      Courtney did not knock on the door,

or participate in its breaching; nor did she say anything before

the door was breached and the officers entered.                        As Marshall

testified in his deposition, the decision to breach the door and

enter the house was his alone, and all that the members of the team

     4
       Team three members present at 419 Otis Street on March 9
were Marshall, three City of Nacogdoches police officers, Cain,
Lightfoot and Crelia, two Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission
officers, and Courtney. The eighth team member was absent.

                                          6
did at the Otis Street premises was pursuant to his directions.

The team members then entered the house.          While there is some

dispute as to what exactly was said and precisely how long the

officers waited before forcing entry, Johnson admitted that she saw

the officers pull up in front of her house and get out of their

cars, heard them coming up on the porch, and heard them “hollering

police, open up.”   She testified that she was heading toward the

door when it was breached.

     Courtney was the last or next to last officer to enter the

house.   She was the only female on the team and was wearing a mask

over her face to protect her identity, as she was an undercover

agent with the Task Force, and did not want to be recognized for

fear of destroying her undercover status.        Once inside, the team

members saw Johnson in the front room of the house.       She was told

by one or more unidentified team members to get down.             When

Courtney first saw Johnson she was starting to kneel to get down on

the couch.   Johnson asked Courtney if she could kneel by the sofa

and Courtney told her she could.       Johnson stated in her deposition

that she asked Courtney “who they were looking for” and Courtney

told her “to turn my head back around and lay down before she shot

me” and that “the lady that told me to lay my head down, she had

her gun in her hand.   I know she had hers because I kindly turned

to see – to ask her that question, but now as far as you know, it




                                   7
wasn’t no clicking on it, but they had them in their hands.”5

There is no evidence that Courtney ever pointed her gun at Johnson.

Johnson did testify that when the officers entered they had their

guns drawn, pointed “towards me,” but that no officer pointed their

gun specifically or directly at her.6


     5
      Courtney on her deposition denies ever “telling her
[Johnson] to turn around or you would shoot her” or words to that
effect. Other officers testified they heard no such threat by
Courtney.
     6
      Johnson’s relevant deposition testimony states (questions
by defense counsel except as otherwise indicated):

     “Q. And how many officers were – actually pointed a gun
     at you that day?

     A. When – when that door fell open they all had guns
     drawn, you know, just, you know, they told me to get on
     the floor.

     Q. Do you know which officers actually pointed a gun at
     you?

     A. Well, they all had their guns in their hands.

     Q. All right.   As far as pointing ‘em at you?

     A. They never did take the guns off of me until after
     they got through searching.

     Q. All right. So you’re – you’re basically saying all
     the officers had their guns on you all the time?

     A. I believe they did as far as to be truthfully I
     believe they did. All except the one – now, the one –
     I don’t know, that was searching I don’t know if he had
     his drawn at the – at the time when he was searching or
     not . . . .

     Q. All right. And so you’re saying that once you’re
     even down on the floor they all still had their guns on
     you?

                                 8
A. I believe – yes, uh-huh.

Q. Okay. Except for one that might have gone through
the house?

A. The one that might have gone through the house. See
I couldn’t see, I couldn’t turn around because she told
me keep my head down and so that’s, you know –

Q. So were you able to see whether they had their guns
on you or not?

A. No, I had my head down like that [indicating].

Q. So you couldn’t see whether they had their guns –

A. No.

Q.   – on you or not?

A. – no, but when I was getting on the floor, I know
they had ‘em drawn.”

“Q. Okay. When the officers came into the house, you
said that from what you saw the officers had their guns
drawn?

A.   Yes.

Q. Now, Ms. Johnson, I want to make a distinction
between them having their guns drawn and pointing their
guns at you, okay?

A.   Uh-huh.   Yes.

Q. Now, let me ask you did any of the officers point
their gun at you?

A. They – when they – when they broke the door down,
they had the guns in their hands and they told me to
get on the floor –

Q. Yes, ma’am.

A. – and they had their guns drawn in their hands.
Uh-huh.”

                              9
     . . .

     “Q. – and I’m trying to make a distinction between
     them having their guns drawn and did – did any officer
     ever point their gun at you?

     A. Just – no, not, you know, not – not to more than
     what they already had in their hand when they came in,
     the guns in their hands.

     Q.   Okay.

     Mr. Stuckey [plaintiff’s counsel]: What direction were
     the guns pointed?

     A.   Towards me.

     Q.   You said when they came in the house they had their guns
drawn?

     A. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. And they told me to get on the
     floor, get on the floor.

     Q. Yes, ma’am. And I’m just trying to figure out from
     you what you testimony is gonna be. Did any of the
     officers point their guns at you?

     A. No more than where they was already pointed when
     they came in. Is that what you’re talking about?

     Q. Yes, ma’am. Did they have their guns in the air
     like this like you see on TV?

     A.   Yes.    Uh-huh.   When they came in.

     Q. And that was how their guns were presented when
     they came in the house?

     A.   Yes.    Uh-huh.

     Q.   And nobody pointed their gun at you?

     A.   No, not just – no.    No.”    (emphasis added)

This was Johnson’s final testimony on that matter.

                                   10
     After conducting a quick sweep of the house and discovering

that Howard was not there, most of the team members departed.7

Courtney and Marshall remained briefly to check on Johnson’s

condition.    Courtney asked Johnson if she was ok and helped her up.

Courtney then asked if she was going to be alright and if she

needed any help.     Johnson said that she was fine and did not need

assistance.      Courtney also apologized to her.             Before leaving,

Marshall gave his card to Johnson and told her that they would pay

to repair her door, which had been damaged during the breach (and

this was done).     He also asked Johnson if she needed any medical

attention,    and   she   declined.        Johnson   was   not    hostilely    or

forcefully touched by any of the officers.                 However, after her

daughter arrived later that day, Johnson went to the emergency room

with chest pains and high blood pressure.              She remained in the

hospital for three days.

     In   late    December   2001,    Johnson    filed     this   suit.       She

ultimately sought damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Bivens v. Six

Unknown Named Agents, 91 S.Ct. 1999 (1971), and the Federal Tort


     7
      At some point, Johnson understood from the officers that
they were looking for Howard and she told them she did not know
Howard. Although Johnson knew Howard’s mother, to whom she was
distantly related, and Howard’s half brother, she had never met
Howard himself.

                                      11
Claims Act, against the Task Force, City of Nacogdoches police

officers Cain and Lightfoot, the City of Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches

County, Nacogdoches deputy sheriffs Courtney and Mendiola, DEA

agent Marshall and the United States, complaining that by the

events of March 9, 2001, the defendants violated her rights under

the Fourth Amendment to be free from unreasonable search and

seizure.   Johnson eventually settled with Cain, Lightfoot and the

City, as well as with Marshall and the United States, and her

claims against those parties were dismissed.8   As Johnson does not

complain on appeal of the dismissal of her claims against the Task

Force, this appeal concerns only the dismissal of her claims

against Courtney, Mendiola and Nacogdoches County.

     Courtney and Mendiola filed separate motions for summary

judgment, each contending they were entitled to qualified immunity

because they did not violate Johnson’s Fourth Amendment rights or,

alternatively, if they did, that under the circumstances not all

reasonable officers situated as they were would realize that their

conduct was constitutionally proscribed.   Nacogdoches County filed

a motion for summary judgment contending that it was not liable

because the summary judgment evidence could not support a finding

that either Courtney or Mendiola, the only County personnel alleged

to have been involved, violated Johnson’s Fourth Amendment rights;


     8
      Johnson’s settlement with Marshall and the United States
was for $55,000; the terms of the settlement with Cain, Lightfoot
and the City are not reflected in the record.

                                12
and, even if the evidence sufficed to show that Johnson’s Fourth

Amendment rights had been violated, it did not suffice to show that

such was a sufficiently direct or proximate result of any policy or

custom of Nacogdoches County; and further that, in any event, no

such formal policy nor any equivalent custom or practice on the

part   of   the   County   was   either    properly   alleged   or   shown   by

sufficient evidence to be unconstitutional or adopted or continued

by county policy makers in deliberate indifference to infringement

of constitutional rights.

       The district court granted these motions for summary judgment

and dismissed Johnson’s suit against Courtney, Mendiola and the

County, who were then the only remaining defendants.                 The court

held that Courtney and Mendiola were entitled to qualified immunity

and that no actionable county policy had been properly pled or

evidenced.    Johnson has timely appealed.

                                  Discussion

1.   Standard of Review

       This court reviews the grant of summary judgement de novo,

applying the same standards as the district court.                   Correa v.

Fischer, 982 F.2d 931, 932 (5th Cir. 1993).            Summary judgment is

appropriate when there is no genuine issue as to any material fact

and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c).     Facts are material if they might affect the

outcome of the lawsuit under the governing law.                 Anderson v.


                                      13
Liberty Lobby, Inc., 106 S.Ct. 2505, 2510 (1986).                To the extent

they exist, genuine factual disputes are to be resolved in favor of

the nonmovant.   Little v. Liquid Air Corp., 37 F.3d 1069, 1075 (5th

Cir. 1994). In response to a properly supported motion for summary

judgment, the nonmovant must identify specific evidence in the

record and articulate the manner in which that evidence supports

that party’s claim, see Forsyth v. Barr, 19 F.3d 1527, 1537 (5th

Cir. 1994), and such evidence must be sufficient to sustain a

finding in favor of the nonmovant on all issues as to which the

nonmovant would bear the burden of proof at trial.               Anderson, 106

S.Ct. at 2511; Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 2552-53

(1986); Burge v. St. Tammany Parish, 336 F.3d 363, 374 (5th Cir.

2003).

2. Determining qualified immunity

     When a governmental official with discretionary authority is

sued for damages under section 1983 and properly raises the defense

of qualified immunity, the plaintiff bears the burden of rebutting

that defense.       Salas v. Carpenter, 980 F.2d 299, 306 (5th Cir.

1992).    In ruling on a motion for summary judgment based on

qualified immunity, the court first determines whether there is

evidence to sustain a finding that the defendant’s complained of

conduct violated plaintiff’s constitutional rights.                If not, no

further   inquiry    is   needed   and    the   defendant   is    entitled   to

qualified immunity.       If so, the inquiry proceeds to determine


                                     14
whether there is evidence to sustain a finding that under the

existing circumstances it would have been “clear to a reasonable

officer   that    his    conduct     was        unlawful   in      the    situation    he

confronted.”      Saucier v. Katz, 121 S.Ct. 2151, 2156 (2001).                         If

not, the defendant is entitled to qualified immunity. See Anderson

v. Creighton, 107 S.Ct. 3034, 3039 (“in the light of pre-existing

law the unlawfulness must be apparent”), 3040 (“The relevant

question . . . is . . . whether a reasonable officer could have

believed . . . [his] warrantless search to be lawful, in light of

clearly established law and the information the searching officer

possessed”; emphasis added) (1987); Malley v. Briggs, 106 S.Ct.

1092, 1096      (1986)   (“qualified        immunity       .   .   .     provides   ample

protection   to    all   but   the    plainly        incompetent          or   those   who

knowingly violate the law”; there is no immunity “if no reasonably

competent officer would have” thought his conduct was lawful, “but

if officers of reasonable competence could disagree on this issue,

immunity should be recognized”; emphasis added).9

3.   Mendiola


     9
      See also Wilson v. Lagne, 119 S.Ct. 1692, 1700 (1999) (“.
. . the appropriate question is . . . whether a reasonable
officer could have believed that . . . [his complained of
conduct] was lawful, in light of clearly established law and the
information the officers possessed”) (emphasis added); McClendon
v. City of Columbia, 305 F.3d 314, 332 (5th Cir. 2002; en banc)
(“qualified immunity should be granted if a reasonable official
would be left uncertain of the law’s application to the facts
confronting him”) (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted).

                                           15
     Johnson argues that Mendiola violated her Fourth Amendment

rights because he provided the DEA with the package for Howard

which showed his address as 419 Otis Street without a reasonable

belief that Howard then in fact lived at or would otherwise be

present at that address.   She asserts that in Payton v. New York,

100 S.Ct. 1371 (1980), the Supreme Court made it clear that an

officer executing an arrest warrant at a residence must have a

reason to believe that the party named in the warrant resides in

the place to be entered and that such party is then present there.

See also United States v. Route, 104 F.3d 59, 62 (5th Cir. 1997)

(officer’s authority to enter residence of person named in warrant

to execute it is governed by a “reason to believe” standard);

United States v. Bervaldi, 226 F.3d 1256, 1263 (11 Cir. 2000).10

     Johnson notes that the only information Mendiola had linking

Howard to the Otis Street address was Howard’s own admission that

it was his current address when he was booked into jail in July of

2000,11 or, at the most, the offense reports on the September and



     10
       In Bervaldi the court held that, as a matter of law,
police entering a house pursuant to an arrest warrant had a
reasonable belief that the subject of the warrant resided there
based on information that was more than six months old. Id., 226
F.3d at 1264-66. The court explained that “[t]here is no
particular rule or time limit for when information becomes stale”
and “[r]esiding in a house . . . generally is not transitory or
ephemeral, but instead endures for some length of time.” Id. at
1265.
     11
       There is no evidence to suggest that this was not Howard’s
actual address at the time he gave the information.

                                16
October 2000 offenses.       Moreover, Johnson contends that although

Mendiola might have verified Howard’s address using a number of

methods, such as surveillance of 419 Otis Street (or of Howard) or

checking with utility companies or neighbors, he did not do so and

instead simply examined the jail records.

     Johnson presented no evidence that on the morning of March 9,

2001, Mendiola   had   (or    that   the   jail   records    contained)   any

information suggesting that Howard’s address was not then 419 Otis

Street or that he would likely not then be there.           Mendiola was not

charged with making an independent investigation.             He was merely

instructed to obtain the subjects’ addresses for inclusion in the

bust out packages, and it was up to his best judgement as to how to

complete the task assigned to him.12         Mendiola did not meet with

Team three, or any other team, and did not accompany any team in

the service of any warrants.     Apart from putting together the bust

out packages, and placing thereon the address of the party named in

the warrant (which he had merely procured from the jail records),



     12
       Further, in response to plaintiff’s opposition to
Mendiola’s motion for summary judgment, Mendiola contended that
he prepared all, or at least 30, of the bust out packages, and
had only a very brief time, one day or less, to do so, and hence
could not reasonably or practically be expected to have
surveillance conducted or utility records checked or the like.
There is no evidence and Johnson has never contended that there
was time to perform those tasks between the request for the bust
out packages and their delivery the morning of March 9. Nor is
there any evidence of who, other than the DEA, was responsible
for when the packages were requested or when the round up was to
begin.

                                     17
and delivering the packages to the DEA on the morning of March 9,

Mendiola had no discussion with and imparted no information to any

of those conducting the round up concerning any of those named in

the warrants or the addresses or likely whereabouts of any of them.

     Moreover, the statement on the bust out packages of the

address of the party named in the arrest warrant may not reasonably

be understood as being absolutely current.       There would frequently

be some lag time before utility records or the like would be

changed.   Indeed, the party might well be residing at an address

for which the utility records were in another’s name.            That was

likely the case with Howard, who had apparently lived with his

mother, whose last name was Wade, while she rented the 419 Otis

Street premises. There is no evidence whatever that examination of

utility or similar records would have suggested that Howard resided

at another address or no longer resided at 419 Otis Street.

     Further,   the   bust   out   packages   could   not   reasonably   be

understood to represent, even impliedly, that the party named in

the arrest warrant would actually be present at the stated address

on the morning of March 9.     Accordingly, Mendiola, in issuing the

bust out packages could reasonably assume that entry into the

stated address on the morning of March 9 would be either by consent

or on the basis of further information that the party named in the

arrest warrant was then actually present there.

     Indeed, that is in essence what Mendiola did assume.            When



                                    18
asked by     Johnson’s      counsel   on    his    deposition    whether   he    now

realized, with the benefit of hindsight, how the events of the

morning of March 9 at 419 Otis Street, showed the importance of

giving persons who are to serve arrest warrants “the most current

information possible,” Mendiola responded that in his ten years of

service that was the only such event,13 and that the way the DEA did

it was not the way “we do our bust outs.”              On Task Force bust outs

the normal procedure was “to give the warrants to the participating

agencies and they arrest the individuals as they see them.                       We

don’t go kick in the door;” if the officer knows the person for

whom the warrant is issued and knows that they are there, the

officer    may    go   to   the   person’s   house.      Being    familiar      with

longstanding       Nacogdoches     policy    and     practice,    Mendiola      knew

Nacogdoches County would not have executed the warrant for Howard’s

arrest the way it was done March 9, and “we don’t kick in a door

for that.”       There was no contrary evidence.14

     While Mendiola could expect that the officers would go to the

419 Otis Street address, it was not unreasonable for him not to


     13
       Nor is there any evidence that any of the other warrants
served in the March 9 round up involved entry into a residence
where the party to be arrested was not then present or involved a
package where the address listed was other than the then address
of the arrestee.
     14
       Similarly, Courtney testified on her deposition that her
standard procedure before attempting to enter the 419 Otis Street
premises would have been to check further (such as with
neighbors) to determine whether Howard was there. There was no
contrary evidence.

                                        19
expect that without further information that Howard was then

present – such as knocking and asking if he was present or the like

– that the officer would enter without consent.                      There is no

evidence to the contrary.         Indeed, the bust out packages contained

a consent to search form, and the DEA operation plan for the round

up specifically advised that “Team leaders should attempt to attain

a signed Consent to Search form from every residence involved.                 If

no Consent to Search can be obtained, please contact the command

center    or     AUSA   Malcolm    [last       name    redacted]     for   further

instruction.”

      There is no summary judgment evidence sufficient to support a

finding that any action or inaction on the part of Mendiola was

proscribed by the Fourth Amendment or constituted or amounted to an

invasion of Johnson’s Fourth Amendment rights.                  The district court

accordingly did not err in granting Mendiola’s motion for summary

judgment that he was entitled to qualified immunity.

4.    Courtney

      Johnson sued Courtney in her individual capacity, claiming

that she and the other team members unlawfully entered her house

and    conducted    the   entry    and        search   in   a    constitutionally

unreasonable manner.

      (a) Johnson’s primary focus is on the nature of the officer’s

entry into her house and particularly the asserted violation of the

knock and announce component of the Fourth Amendment. Given United



                                         20
States v. Banks, 124 S.Ct. 571 (2003), it is clearly arguable that

there was no such violation.        We need not, and do not, ultimately

determine that matter, however. It is undisputed that Courtney had

no part in the decision to make the entry in question.                She did not

knock or demand entry, she did not participate in forcing the door,

and she did not counsel or direct such action.             DEA agent Marshall,

the team leader, made all those decisions entirely on his own;

Marshall alone knocked and demanded entry; he alone directed City

police officer Cain to breach the door, and Cain did so.                     It is

undisputed that the members of Team three were under the direction

of   team   leader   DEA   agent    Marshall     and    “were    to   follow      his

instructions and the DEA procedures for executing the warrants.”

There was no constitutional violation committed by Courtney in this

connection.     Accordingly,       the    district     court    did   not   err   in

granting Courtney’s motion for summary judgment as to this claim.

      (b) With respect to Courtney’s subsequent entry into the

house, this, as noted, was entirely at the direction of Marshall,

the team leader.     His uncontradicted testimony is that, so far as

he was aware, none of the officers did anything at the scene that

he did not tell them to do.        Courtney was the last or next to last

to enter.     She was aware that the bust out package information

furnished Marshall showed Howard’s residence as 419 Otis Street.

She had no information indicating that likely was not correct or

that Howard likely was not there.             The district court, correctly



                                         21
noting our holding in Doe v. Dallas Independent School District,

153 F.3d 211, 219 (5th Cir. 1998), that “[a]ctions and decisions by

officials    that   are    merely   inept,   erroneous,      ineffective,   or

negligent do not amount to deliberate indifference and thus do not

divest the official of qualified immunity,”15 held that Courtney (as

well as Mendiola) was entitled to qualified immunity.               Given that

“[t]here is no particular rule or time limit for when information

becomes stale” for these purposes and that “residency in a house .

. . generally is not transitory or ephemeral but instead endures

for some length of time,” Bervaldi, 226 F.3d at 1265,16 we hold that

the district court did not err in determining that, under all the

circumstances, Courtney was entitled to qualified immunity with

respect to her entry into the house under Marshall’s direction

after Marshall had knocked, announced and demanded entry, after

Cain had breached the door at Marshall’s direction, and after

Marshall    and   others   had   entered,    because   not    all   reasonable

officers, with the information Courtney then had, would have



     15
       And our similar holding in Wren v. Towe, 130 F.3d 1154,
1159 (5th Cir. 1997), that “[i]f reasonable public officials
could differ on the legality of a defendant’s actions, the
defendant is entitled to immunity from suit” and “[l]aw
enforcement officers are only human, and inevitably, accidents
and mistakes of judgment will happen, and these mistakes alone do
not open officers to personal liability.”
     16
       We are aware of no cases in this Circuit contrary to these
observations in Bervaldi. See also U.S. v. Hooshmand, 931 F.3d
725, 735-37 (11th Cir. 1991) (11 month old report by informant
supports warrant).

                                      22
concluded that her entry was illegal.        Cf. Saucier, 121 S.Ct. at

2159 (“what the officer reasonably understood his powers and

responsibilities to be, when he acted”).

     (c) Johnson also complains of excessive force being used by

the officers after their entry into the house.17 The reasonableness

of a particular use of force “must be judged from the perspective

of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20

vision of hindsight . . . . The calculus of reasonableness must

embody allowance for the fact that police officers are often forced

to make split-second judgments . . . about the amount of force that

is necessary in a particular situation.”        Graham v. Connor, 109

S.Ct. 1865, 1872 (1989).      After the officers entered, one or more

unidentified officers told Johnson to get down.           When Courtney

first saw her, Johnson was starting to kneel to get down on the

sofa.     Johnson asked Courtney if she could kneel by the sofa, and

Courtney    said   she   could.   Shortly   thereafter   Johnson,   while

kneeling on the couch, started to turn her head and Courtney

allegedly told her “to turn my head back around and lay down before

she shot me.”18     The officers had their guns drawn but none ever


     17
       To establish a claim for excessive force in violation of
the Fourth Amendment, a plaintiff must prove “(1) an injury (2)
which resulted directly and only from the use of force that was
clearly excessive to the need and (3) the force used was
objectively unreasonable.” Williams v. Bramer, 180 F.3d 699, 703
(5th Cir. 1999).
     18
       We assume this happened, though it was denied by Courtney,
and the other officers present heard no such thing.

                                   23
pointed their weapons directly or specifically at her.           By her own

admission, Johnson was never hostilely or forcefully touched by

Courtney or any of the officers.          Once the officers became aware

that Howard was not present they treated her with respect and

concern; Courtney helped her up and asked her if she was alright,

Courtney and Marshall apologized to her, Marshall said her door

would be paid for, left his card, and asked if she was alright or

needed medical assistance, and Johnson advised that she was alright

and did not need assistance.         The evidence does not suffice to

support a finding that Courtney used constitutionally excessive

force against Johnson.       See, e.g., Hinojosa v. City of Terrell, 834

F.2d 1223, 1230-32 (5th Cir. 1988).            Accordingly, the district

court did   not   err   in    granting    Courtney’s   motion   for   summary

judgment as to this claim.

5.   Nacogdoches County

     Johnson complains on appeal of the district court’s grant of

summary judgment in favor of Nacogdoches County on her claim based

on the County’s alleged policy or practice of not requiring – as

opposed to leaving to discretion in individual instances – the

updating (by means such as utility records, surveillance or the

like) of the information in the Sheriff’s Office files concerning

the address of a party for whom an arrest warrant had been issued

before furnishing that address information to an officer who was to

execute the warrant.         Johnson also complains in passing of the


                                     24
district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the County

on her claim that the County failed to adequately train Mendiola

that he was required to do such updating.

     (a) Johnson’s primary argument on appeal in support of these

contentions is that since May 2002 the district court had limited

discovery to qualified immunity issues and events surrounding the

entry   into   Johnson’s   house    and    as   a   consequence   “it   is

fundamentally unfair to deny Plaintiff Johnson the opportunity to

prove her allegations concerning the existence of a deficient

actual policy.”

     The County responds to this by asserting that Johnson has

waived her discovery complaint.          The County observes that after

Johnson filed her second amended complaint (her final pleading),

the County and the other defendants on November 8, 2002, filed a

motion to suspend the pretrial deadlines, noting, among other

things, that “Defendant County of Nacogdoches anticipates filing a

motion for summary judgment as well, which will likely lead to

discovery by the Plaintiff.”       At that time, the district court’s

June 24, 2002 scheduling order provided that November 21, 2002 was

the deadline for filing dispositive motions and December 1, 2002

was the discovery deadline; final pretrial conference was set for

January 6, 2003 and jury selection for January 7, 2003.                 On

November 18, Johnson filed her opposition to the motion to suspend

the deadlines, asserting that she “is prepared to comply with all


                                    25
of the deadlines and opposes any delay in the trial.”                The record

does not reflect any ruling on the motion to suspend the pretrial

deadlines.

     On November 21, 2002, the County filed its motion for summary

judgment.      On December 2, 2002, Johnson filed her response to the

County’s motion.        The    response    initially   notes   the    May   2002

limitation on discovery and asserts that “the motion is premature

and without merit.”      The body of the response argues at length the

merits    of   the   motion,   asserting    that   Mendiola’s    disposition

reflects that his actions in respect to furnishing Howard’s address

in the bust out package was consistent with longstanding County

policy, that he was not disciplined for furnishing the 419 Otis

Street address, and that he was not required, and hence was not

trained, to update the address before furnishing it.            The response

also argues that “a municipality is equally responsible whether an

action is taken repeatedly or only once after a deficient policy is

established.”19      The response does not request a postponement of

ruling on the County’s motion, and the only prayer for relief is

that the County’s motion “be in all things denied.”             The County’s

December 9, 2002 reply to Johnson’s response, among other things,

replies to Johnson’s brief comments about lack of discovery by



     19
       The response states in a footnote that “Johnson has not
been allowed to do any discovery concerning the number of
victims.” The record does not reflect any attempt to make any
such discovery.

                                      26
calling the district court’s attention to the above referenced

portions of the County’s motion to suspend the pretrial deadlines

and Johnson’s opposition to it.       In the meantime, all parties had

on December 6, 2002, filed their joint proposed pretrial order,

listing contested issues of fact and law, including all those

applicable to the claims against and defenses of the County,

stating   that   trial   would    probably      last   two   days   plus   jury

selection, and listing outstanding pending motions, including the

County’s motion for summary judgment (as well as the summary

judgment motions of all the other defendants) and the motion to

suspend   pretrial   deadlines,    but    not    including    any   motion   to

postpone ruling on or to continue the County’s motion for summary

judgment (or the trial itself) nor any motion under Fed. R. Civ. P.

56(f) or for any discovery.       On December 17, the district court,

sua sponte, continued the previous January 6 and 7, 2003 settings

for final pretrial conference and jury selection, and set the

motions of the individual defendants for summary judgment on

qualified immunity for oral argument on January 6, 2003, and on

that date those particular motions were heard and were taken under

advisement.20    On January 15, 2003, the court ordered mediation

before the Magistrate Judge who on January 21 reported that Johnson

had settled with Cain, Lightfoot and the City, but that mediation



     20
        At the January 6, 2003 hearing it was announced that
Johnson had settled with Marshall and the United States.

                                     27
had reached impasse between Johnson, Courtney, Mendiola and the

County. Nothing further transpired until on March 4, 2003, Johnson

filed her supplemental response to the motions for summary judgment

of the County, Courtney, and Mendiola, in which Johnson merely

addressed the Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari in United States

v. Banks, supra.

       Nothing further transpired until on March 13, 2003, the

district court filed its memorandum opinion holding that Courtney,

Mendiola and the County were entitled to summary judgment.                   With

respect to the County, the district court ruled, inter alia: that

“the facts alleged in the Second Amended Complaint do not tend to

show that the County . . . policymakers adopted or continued any

such   policy   [as   alleged]   in       deliberate    indifference    to   the

constitutional rights of its inhabitants” in as much as Johnson

“relies solely on this incident” and “pleads no other facts or

circumstances;” that essentially the same deficiencies were present

in Johnson’s failure to train allegations; that “DEA agent Marshall

supervised the March 9, 2002,        raid.     Any mistakes that day fail to

rise above the ordinary negligence of individual officers and

cannot be attributed to their government employers;” and, that the

County “meets its burden of establishing that the record, taken as

a whole, indicates that there is no genuine issue as to any

material fact regarding Johnson’s § 1983 claims against it.”

       Considering    the   record   as    a   whole,   we   reject   Johnson’s


                                      28
complaint on appeal concerning lack of discovery as to the County’s

motion for summary judgment.        To begin with, when in November 2002

the defendants moved to suspend the pretrial deadlines, noting that

the County was going to file a motion for summary judgment “which

will likely lead to discovery by plaintiff,” Johnson opposed the

motion stating she was then “prepared to comply with all the

deadlines and opposes any delay in the trial.”               At that time, the

discovery deadline was set to expire in about two weeks and trial

was set to begin in some seven weeks.           Within some three weeks, the

parties (after the timely filing of the County’s summary judgment

motion) filed their joint pretrial order, plainly in contemplation

of the January 7, 2003 trial date.         No party ever filed a motion to

continue the trial date.           Although Johnson’s response to the

County’s summary judgment motion stated the motion was premature,

the response addressed the motion on its merits, did not request

any sort of postponement of ruling and prayed only that the motion

be “in all things denied.”        Johnson did not respond to the County’s

reply which had noted Johnson’s statements in her above referenced

opposition to the motion to suspend deadlines.               Although Johnson

later   filed   a   supplemental     response     to   the   County’s   summary

judgment motion, this response says nothing about prematurity and

did not request any sort of postponement of ruling.                  Moreover,

Johnson   never     filed   any   motion   to   lift   any    restrictions   on

discovery or to extend the discovery deadlines, which expired



                                      29
December 1, 2002, nor did she ever file any discovery request which

was denied, nor did she ever file any motion or affidavit under

Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(f).    And Johnson did not otherwise inform the

court how additional discovery would likely create a genuine issue

of material fact.   Indeed, her second amended complaint, her final

pleading, does not allege, even generally or on information and

belief, that the County’s asserted policy of not requiring updating

of Sheriff’s Office address records (such as by surveillance or

checking with neighbors or utility records) before furnishing that

address information to officers who were going to serve an arrest

warrant, ever resulted in any other similar incident where the

officers serving the warrant made a nonconsensual entry into a

house where the person named in the warrant did not reside.

Finally, Johnson did conduct discovery on County policy and its

effects, including, but not limited to, Mendiola’s deposition, and

the record reflects no instance where any specific discovery sought

by Johnson was denied.

     Under all these circumstances, Johnson has not shown that the

district court abused its discretion in proceeding to rule in mid

March   2003   on   the   County’s        motion   for   summary   judgment

notwithstanding its May 2002 order limiting discovery. See Stearns

Airport Equipment Co. Inc. v. FMC Corp., 170 F.3d 518, 535 (5th

Cir. 1999) (a “Rule 56(f) motion must demonstrate . . . how the

additional discovery will likely create a genuine issue of material


                                     30
fact” and a district court does not abuse its discretion in denying

such a motion where “it lacked specificity in identifying the

needed discovery”); Krim v. Banc Texas Group, Inc., 989 F.2d 1435,

1442 (5th Cir. 1993) (to postpone summary judgment ruling to obtain

further discovery a party must indicate to the court “why he needs

additional discovery and how the additional discovery will create

a genuine issue of material fact”).             See also United States v.

Bloom, 112 F.3d 200, 205 n.17 (5th Cir. 1997); Porter v. Delta Air

Lines Inc., 98 F.3d 881, 887 (5th Cir. 1996); Washington v.

Allstate Ins. Co., 901 F.2d 1281, 1285 (5th Cir. 1990).

     (b) It is clear that a municipality may not be held liable

under section 1983 on the basis of respondeat superior.               Monell v.

Department     of    Social   Services,    98   S.Ct.     2018    (1978).     A

municipality’s liability under section 1983 requires, among other

things,   either       the    unconstitutional     action        of   municipal

policymakers    or    a   municipal   policy.     Hence    the    only   County

officials or employees whose conduct is complained of are Mendiola

and Courtney, each of whom was only a deputy sheriff and hence was

not a policymaker.        Turner v. Upton County, Texas, 915 F.2d 133,

136 (5th Cir. 1990). Municipal policy for purposes of section 1983

liability may consist of

     “1.   A policy statement, ordinance, regulation, or
     decision that is officially adopted and promulgated by
     the municipality’s lawmaking officers or by an official
     to whom the lawmakers have delegated policy-making
     authority; or


                                      31
     2. A persistent, widespread practice of city officials
     or employees, which, although not authorized by
     officially adopted and promulgated policy, is so common
     and well settled as to constitute a custom that fairly
     represents municipal policy.    Actual or constructive
     knowledge of such custom must be attributable to the
     governing body of the municipality or to an official to
     whom that body had delegated policy-making authority.”
     Johnson v. Moore, 958 F.2d 92, 94 (5th Cir. 1992).

     Johnson has not alleged (nor is there any evidence of) a

formal or official policy of the first kind above described.                 We

assume, arguendo only, that she has sufficiently alleged and shown

a policy of the second kind, a longstanding custom and practice of

not uniformly requiring (but instead leaving to discretion in

individual instances) sheriff’s department personnel to update (by

means such as surveillance or checking with neighbors or utility

companies or the like) the most recent address for an individual

reflected   in   the    jail     (or    Sheriff’s   Office)     records   before

furnishing that address to officers who were going to execute an

arrest warrant for the individual.

     For a municipality to be liable on account of its policy, the

plaintiff must show, among other things, either (1) that the policy

itself   violated      federal    law    or   authorized   or    directed    the

deprivation of federal rights or (2) that the policy was adopted or

maintained by the municipality’s policymakers “with ‘deliberate

indifference’ as to its known or obvious consequences . . . A

showing of simple or even heightened negligence will not suffice.”

Board of County Comm’rs of Buyan County v. Brown, 117 S.Ct. 1382,


                                         32
1390 (1997).      See also, e.g., City of Canton, Ohio v. Harris, 109

S.Ct. 1197, 1206 (1989) (municipal liability requires “deliberate

indifference to the constitutional rights of its [the City’s]

inhabitants”); Burge v. St. Tammany Parish, 336 F.3d 363, 370 (5th

Cir. 2003); Piotrowski v. City of Houston, 237 F.3d 567, 579 (5th

Cir. 2001).     Here, the only federal right allegedly infringed as a

result of the alleged policy is the right to be free of unlawful

entry into one’s home.          As reflected in our above discussion

concerning Mendiola, the alleged policy does not facially violate

that right and does not purport to either authorize or direct any

entry into a home or residence.        Hence, Johnson must show that the

policy was adopted or maintained with deliberate indifference to

the known or obvious fact that such constitutional violations would

result.      That “generally requires that a plaintiff demonstrate at

least a pattern of similar violations.”              Burge, 336 F.3d at 370

(internal quotations omitted); Cozzo v. Tangipahoa Parish Council,

279   F.3d    273,   286-88   (5th   Cir.   2002);   McClendon   v.   City   of

Columbia, 258 F.3d 432, 441-43 (5th Cir. 2001), rev’d en banc in

other respects, this portion of opinion reinstated, 305 F.3d 314,

321 n.3 (5th Cir. 2002); Thompson v. Upshur County, 245 F.3d 447,

449 (5th Cir. 2001); Snyder v. Trepagnier, 142 F.3d 791, 798-99

(5th Cir. 1998); Tomkins v. Belt, 828 F.2d 298, 304-05 (5th Cir.

1987).    Here Johnson did not plead that there had ever been any

similar incidents (or allege any other facts suggesting that the


                                       33
alleged   policy      was   adopted    or   maintained    with      deliberate

indifference     to   constitutional    rights),   and   the    evidence,   as

discussed in part 3 above in connection with Mendiola, shows

without contradiction that no similar incident had occurred in

Mendiola’s some ten years on the job and that officers with arrest

warrants to execute generally did so when they saw the named party

and would go to a residence to do so only if they knew the party

named in the arrest warrant and knew he was there, and did not

“kick in doors.”      There is no contrary evidence.           Johnson relies

solely on this single incident. The claim against the County hence

fails for a lack of any showing of deliberate indifference.21

     (c) Finally, and in all events, Johnson’s claims against the

County    were   properly     dismissed     because   even     if   Johnson’s

constitutional rights were violated, it is clear that no complained

of County policy or failure to train was the “moving force” behind

that alleged violation.      As we said in Fraire v. City of Arlington,

957 F.2d 1268, 1281 (5th Cir. 1992):

     “[A] direct causal connection must exist between the
     policy and the alleged constitutional deprivation. This
     connection must be more than a mere ‘but for’ coupling
     between cause and effect. To form the basis of liability
     under § 1983, a municipal policy must be affirmatively
     linked to the constitutional violation and be the moving
     force behind it.” (footnotes omitted; emphasis added).


     21
        For the same reason, Johnson’s only other complaint on
appeal respecting the County, namely failure to train Mendiola to
always update (from outside sources) address information in the
sheriff’s records before furnishing it to officers who would
execute warrants, likewise fails.

                                       34
See also City of Canton, 109 S.Ct. at 1206 (“must be closely

related to the ultimate injury” and have “actually caused” the

constitutional violation complained of); Piotrowski, 237 F.3d at

581; Pineda v. City of Houston, 291 F.3d 325, 334 (5th Cir. 2002).

What happened at 419 Otis Street starting at about 9 a.m. on March

9, 2001, was entirely determined by DEA agent Marshall, who was in

charge and whose directions all officers present were required to

and did follow.   The warrants were to be served according to DEA

procedures. Marshall had not been informed that Howard was, or was

likely, then present at 419 Otis Street.   If Marshall had simply

waited some twenty or thirty seconds more until Johnson arrived at

the door, she would doubtless have informed him that Howard did not

live there and was not then present, and likely would have allowed

the officers to enter to verify that.22    Marshall’s decision to

force entry, rather than seek entry by consent, and to do so

without further information, was entirely his own decision.   There

is no evidence suggesting that Marshall made that decision for any

reason related to any County policy or any understanding thereof




     22
        And, if she did not allow entry, the house could have
been placed under surveillance by some of the team members
(and/or by other officers summoned) and the rest could have
continued to serve other warrants. And, Marshall did not seek to
attain a consent to search form or seek advice from the Assistant
United States Attorney or the DEA command center as the DEA
operational plan called for if such consent could not be
obtained.

                                35
which he may have had,23 or for any reason other than that he

thought that decision to be appropriate in the light of his own

training    and    experience       as   a    DEA   agent   and     DEA   policy   and

procedures. Indeed the uncontradicted evidenced is that Marshall’s

decision    in    this    respect    was      contrary    to   County     policy   and

practice.        If there was causative fault on the part of the

authorities, the fault was Marshall’s and/or the DEA’s, not the

County’s.     Cf. Rheuark v. Shaw, 628 F.2d 297, 305-06 (5th Cir.

1980)     (county’s      curtailing      budget     for     court    reporters     not

“proximate cause” of unconstitutional delay in preparation of

statement of facts where “[t]he party primarily at fault” was the

district judge).

                                     Conclusion

     For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court

is

                                     AFFIRMED.




     23
       There is no evidence Marshall had any information
concerning any County policy.

                                             36